
My Ex Alpha Claims My Son
Chapter 3
I was still holding Baker when I heard the click of heels on stone.
Mya.
She crossed the garden with that practiced grace, her Luna necklace catching the sunlight. Other mothers watched her approach, their expressions carefully neutral. She'd always known how to work a crowd.
"Olivia." Her voice dripped sweetness. "I see you've met my son."
I stood slowly, keeping Baker behind me. "Your son just destroyed Baker's castle and called him a rogue brat."
Mya's smile didn't waver. "Boys will be boys. Lennox is just protective of his future position." She raised her voice, making sure the other Lunas could hear. "After all, mongrel rogue children shouldn't be allowed near pureblood Alpha heirs. It's a matter of safety."
The garden went quiet.
I felt Baker's small hand grip my dress. Felt the eyes of every mother, every child, turning toward us. This was what Mya wanted—a public humiliation, a reminder that I didn't belong here.
But I wasn't the broken she-wolf who'd fled five years ago.
"Nobility," I said, my voice carrying across the garden, "is in conduct, not blood." I met Mya's eyes. "Baker showed restraint and kindness when your son attacked him. He chose peace over violence. That's what real strength looks like."
Mya's smile tightened. "How dare you—"
"And if you're raising Lennox to believe that cruelty is acceptable because of his bloodline, then you're failing him as a mother." I let the words hang in the air. "The best Alphas lead with honor. Not entitlement."
I watched the color drain from Mya's face. Around us, I heard murmurs of agreement. One of the older Lunas nodded slowly.
Mya's hand flew to her necklace, that nervous tell she'd never managed to hide. "You have no right to lecture me about parenting. You, who abandoned your own—"
"Careful." The word came out like ice.
She stopped. Something in my expression must have warned her she was crossing a line even she couldn't uncross.
I took Baker's hand. "Come on, sweetheart. Let's go find Daddy."
As we walked away, I heard one of the Lunas say to another, "She's right, you know. That boy needs discipline."
Mya's humiliation was complete.
But I knew this wasn't over.
---
The Summit Gala that evening was everything I'd expected—crystal chandeliers, silk gowns, Alphas posturing and Lunas calculating. The ballroom glittered with wealth and power, and I felt every eye track us as we entered.
Cullen's hand rested on my waist, steady and warm. Baker was safely back in our suite with Thomas. Just us and a room full of wolves who wanted to know who we were.
Let them wonder.
We'd just taken our seats when the toasts began. Alpha after Alpha stood, raising glasses, making speeches about unity and strength. The usual political theater.
Then Axel stood.
I felt it before I saw him—that familiar presence, now twisted with something darker. He swayed slightly, and I caught the sharp scent of whiskey on the air. Drunk. Or close to it.
Mya sat beside him, her hand on his arm, whispering something in his ear. He shook her off.
"I have something to say." His voice cut through the polite chatter.
The room fell silent.
Axel's gaze locked on me, then shifted to Cullen. His eyes had that wild gleam I'd seen on the ridge, his wolf too close to the surface.
"That man," he pointed at Cullen, his hand shaking, "and that woman stole my son."
The words hit like a physical blow.
I felt Cullen go still beside me, that dangerous stillness that meant his control was slipping.
"They kidnapped my biological heir," Axel continued, his voice rising. "Five years ago, Olivia faked our pup's death to hide him from me. That boy—Baker—is mine. My blood. My son."
The ballroom erupted in whispers.
I couldn't breathe. Couldn't think past the roaring in my ears.
Axel took a step forward. "I demand a paternity test. I demand custody. That child belongs to the Dark River Pack."
Cullen stood.
He didn't shout. Didn't snarl. He simply rose from his chair, and the temperature in the room dropped.
I felt it—the release of his aura, just a fraction of the power he kept locked down. The air grew heavy, thick, pressing down on every wolf in the room. The chandeliers swayed. Candle flames flickered and dimmed.
Alphas grabbed their tables. Lunas gasped.
Axel's face went white.
"You will not," Cullen said, his voice soft and terrible, "make false claims against my family."
The pressure increased. I saw wolves bare their necks instinctively, their bodies recognizing a predator far above their rank.
"That is my mate. That is my son. And if you ever threaten them again, I will consider it an act of war."
Axel was sweating now, his body trembling under the weight of Cullen's aura. But his eyes—his eyes still held that delusional certainty.
"He's mine," Axel whispered. "I know he's mine."
Then Marcus was there, Axel's Beta, grabbing his Alpha's arm. "Axel. Stop. Please."
He physically dragged Axel backward, toward the exit, while Axel fought him. "Let me go! That's my son! My heir!"
The doors closed behind them.
Cullen's aura retracted, and the room could breathe again.
I sat frozen, my hands clenched in my lap, feeling the eyes of every Alpha, every Luna, burning into me.
And I knew—this was only the beginning of the nightmare.
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